MD-N to Fox Lake

Starting out of Chicago there was a problem with the locomotive. Very little time was
wasted in removing the problem locomotive and adding a new locomotive. Even though boarding
was delayed to 5 minutes before departure time, the train departed on time anyway!

I've seen a number of people bring food and drink onto the train and eat it on the train.
I would assume that eating is allowed on these trains unlike the Metrolink trains in
Los Angeles.

I still can't get over how fast the train gets out of the downtown Chicago area and is
out into the suburbs. Actually, it doesn't take long before the train has even left
behind the dense suburbs and is out in wooded areas where many homes, even new homes,
are large with very big yards. Between these wooded communities are large expanses of
empty woods and lakes. Once in a while there will be a clearing with some ongoing
industrial operation such as a gravel pit or a grain processing facility. These
scattered industrial operations were obviously here long before they started to build
new homes in these wooded areas.

At 3 P.M. in the afternoon I noticed that trains heading both in and out of Chicago are
traveling on the left instead of on the right. That seemed unusual to me. In most cases,
when a line has double track, the commuter trains usually travel on the right just like
passenger cars.

On the way back to Chicago, running against the early rush hour at 3:10 P.M., there are
just as many people going into Chicago as coming out of Chicago! Perhaps that is because
this is Friday and there is much to do in Chicago on Fridays.

Unlike my previous journeys on the Metra where I did not see any use of radios and the
train ran on time like clockwork, this train did run into some unexpected red signals.
They did resort to using the radio to contact the Dispatcher. The Conducter and Engineer
were talking back and forth over the radio, but just during the time they were stuck at
the red signal. We lost a bit of time at that signal and stayed about 11 minutes behind
for quite a way.

The Conductor got into a brief discussion with some passengers carrying protest signs to
a demonstration in Chicago against the bombing of Serbia. He said: "It is your right to
protest as an American. I'm a real American. I spent 10 years in the military." On his
way back, he said to them: "You are right to protest. We have no business being over
there."

By the time we got to the Golf Station, this train was really getting packed! There are
still a few seats here and there, but it is really filling up! Two pepole just sat down
in the area the Conductor set aside for his "office". I wonder what his reaction will be
when he comes back. Good thing we don't have too much further to do to Chicago. Little by
little, even the scattered empty seats are filling up!

The above are photos of a McDonald's along the Fox Lake Metra route.

Click here for a video of the Metra train heading
through woods along the Fox Lake route (122k - 5 seconds).

MD-W to Elgin/Big Timber

Since the Metra I took from Fox Lake back to Chicago was running 13 minutes late, I barely had
time to make it to this train. I got as close to the door as I could before that train stopped
so that I could get a head start in making it over to this train. I made it in time, but this
is one of the most crowded Metra trains that I have been on! Probably both because it is the
start of the rush hour and because it is Friday, the end of the week.

I went up about 4 or 5 cars before I boarded figuring that the cars further from the station
would be less crowded. That was partly true. The first car I boarded didn't have any seats
available at all. I continued to move through the train from car to car further and further
away from the station. There were many dozens of people both ahead and behind me in the aisle
doing the same thing! I didn't see any seats available upstairs in any car. As I got further
down the train, I did start to see more and more people sitting alone in pairs of seats. The
very last car was the rule breaker as it was already packed solid!

I went back in the other direction until I found the first seat where the person hadn't
blocked it with their coat, pocketbook or briefcase and where the person wasn't so wide
as to be taking up two seats all by themself. I sat next to a guy that was relaxing with
a beer. A beer? Well, there aren't any signs on the Metra that says drinking alcoholic
beverages is not allowed! And ... there was a previous trip to Chicago where I saw a store
selling cans of beer to passengers in the station out of this big barrel full of ice. People
were just coming into the station off from work, grabbing a beer out of the ice barrel,
purchasing it, and I assume taking it with them onto the train. Later on my way back on this
same train I saw other people bring aboard boxes of the small single servings of wine.
It seems interesting that Amtrak prohibits coach passengers from bringing their own alcohol
onboard but Metra does not seem to mind. But since Metra doesn't have Cafe Cars, you aren't
taking away any of their business by bringing your own along!

The Big Timber Station wasn't quite finished when I went there. One platform is in
pretty good shape. The other platform hasn't had the cement poured yet. They let us off on
the side without a platform. At first I was wondering why they did that, but I'll explain
that in a moment. Most of the people that use the Metra are commuters so they usually don't
have luggage. On this train, however, there was a woman with 3 suitcases. Three men helped
her off the train with her luggage and then carried the luggage over to the other platform
for her. It would have been impossible for her to roll the suitcase through the rough dirt.

The reason our train went to the side without a platform is that another train arrived a
few minutes after ours. I was a little mystified about that. I had checked the schedule
earlier and saw that the next train to Big Timber didn't leave for another half hour. What
I didn't notice was that second train was a double express. The train I took was an express,
but the later train skipped almost twice as many stops! Thus, they needed the other platform
for the second train to arrive.

As it turned out, I would still have been able to get this return train, even if I had missed
my train coming out. Not only that, but the ride might have been a bit more enjoyable because
of the double express. These Metra schedules can be tricky. I've noticed that some express
trains will even arrive at the final stop before a local train. It is built into some
schedules where the express train will catch up to the local train and pass it!

NCS to Antioch

North Central Service to Antioch

Chicago to Antioch

Traveled by Steve Grande: 1999-Mar-25

Below are photos of the inside of the Antioch Metra Station.
Click on any photo for a larger image:

The above are photos of the inside of the Metra Station at Antioch. The station is left open
unattended during Metra operating hours. There is plenty of seating, restrooms, and is heated.
Most stops along the Metra routes have similar types of buildings where passengers can wait
out of the Chicago weather.

The route to Antioch is Metra's newest major addition and is the only major addition in
commuter rail made to the system in many years. Many of the neighborhoods along this route
are new and have been built in just the last couple of decades. There are brand new
developments along this route still being built and sold.